notes for reading

Toward a better journal system

2026-05-16 [Sat] 09:30 UTC
#life

There are many planners being sold across the internet. Some are very cute. Many are overpriced. None of them are simple enough for me, so I made my own. This is not a planner intended to map every hour of every day, but focuses on life by the weeks and months.

The annoying thing about making a planner is that there are many days, weeks, and months in a year; to get around this, I used HTML and CSS to trivially generate printable pages. I wanted a minimal planner using A5 pages so it wasn't too big and I could print it as a booklet on standard A4 page size.

The planner opens to a spread of the 12 months of the year. Each month gets a box that's about 7cm x 7cm (2.75" x 2.75"). Enough space to jot down really important goals and reminders.

Next, each month begins with its own spread. This is meant to give an overview of the month -- important notes -- but not go into crazy depth. The width of each column is 7cm again (2.75") but the seperation between dates is only hinted at. There's about 2.6cm per day (~ 1") to write in. And there's a little extra space at the end of each month -- even more in February!

The meat of the planner is the weekly view. Each day gets about 7cm x 10cm (2.75" x 4") which gives plenty of space to keep notes for each day. There's an extra space for each week that includes the ISO week number. The bonus space may be useful for reflections or goals for the week.

I'll be printing this out soon and see how useful it is. As someone who's never been a fanatical journaller, I think this should be fine for logging my various experiments and writing down brief notes about my life. What do you think of this journal? I would love to hear your feedback !

Estimated pages for a year: 53 weeks + 12 months + 1 year + 1 cover

= 67 spreads = 34 sheets of paper (cheap to print)

Voxchan

2026-04-12 [Sun] 22:00 UTC
#internet #tech

Inspired by my friend vulonkaaz's "chan-like" site, //paperchan.club, an imageboard that only allows user-drawn images to be uploaded, I've began work on a new experiment I am tentatively calling Voxchan[^1] that only allows recorded audio to be uploaded. Paperchan is an exciting community for a number of reasons. Due to depending on original content that takes some level of effort and creativity, a lot of cool art pops up there every day, and the steady stream of cool art getting posted encourages more cool art to keep getting posted.

I don't think I've ever seen a voice clip-based platform before. Sure, there's been group calling apps like Mumble, Skype, Discord, et all for a long time, and there's plenty of places to upload songs, but a forum where people post by speaking seems to be entirely novel. Vocaroo encourages anonymous audio uploads but it's more of a file-hosting service than a community.

Is voxchan an anonymous site? This is a fun problem to think about. People's voices are largely unique, but I feel someone is unable to be "doxxed" by posting with their voice alone.; and, with a little effort, people can also alter their accent, tone, and other bits of personally identifying data to some degree.

There's a hypothesis I have that making posts depend on voice will have a positive effect on the quality of contributions. On an imageboard or textboard it's pretty easy for 2 or 3 guys to try and derail every thread but appear as the voice of the community. Samefagging takes significantly more effort to do via voice; most haters and losers have awful voices too so I think they would rather not put in the effort it takes to keep up a trolling campaign. And their parents would probably yell at them for making too much noise on the computer.

There are a lot of lonely people in the world, especially in the world of chan-like sites, and I think that being able to listen to the discussions instead of just reading more text could have a positive effect for them. People who are otherwise scared to do "voice reveals" in communities like imageboards, Discord, IRC, et al may also be more willing to speak in an anonymous forum.

Only time will tell how it will play out. A public release may be ready in a few weeks. If you're interested in trying out the in-dev software, drop me a line.

[1]: Vox being Latin for "voice", "sound"

DND gear

2026-01-22 [Thu] 16:45 UTC
#games

Recently began playing Dungeons and Dragons 5e with some local friends who have never played any kind of TTRPG game before. As the Dungeon Master, I'm working with a pretty barebones set of "gear" to get the game rolling:

Excluding the tablet, which I already owned, all in all it was about $20 for everything. The dice were the most expensive bit. Now that I have a base operating set, any part (except the tablet lol) can be easily replaced if lost or damaged. If the game price were divided up among the players, they would have only had to chip in a few bucks to start playing.

It would be nice to play on 3D maps with little painted metal figures on a big gaming table. But this is already enough to get everyone comfortably playing! You can get into tabletop RPGs without breaking the bank.

I would like to try moving on to DND 1e or some OSR game later (OSRIC? OSE Advanced?) once the players get the hang of 5e. Mechanically, 5e characters feel a bit "samey" ... not as bad as 4e was though. I appreciate that 5e is a bit lighter on rules than 3.5e but a bit more "crunchiness" would still improve the game. My biggest criticism of DND 5e is that it takes a long time for people to set up their characters, but I hope it can motivate them to strive to keep their players alive.

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